Try opening Windows Calendar and see if that makes any difference.
Also see if this makes any difference:
1. Go to the Vista start menu and type cmd
2. The search results will display a program titled cmd
3. Right-click on the link and select "Run as administrator"
4. type "netsh interface tcp set global autotuning=disabled" without
the quotatioin marks
5. Test your POP account and see if you can now download your mail.
6. If nothing changes, reenable the autotuning feature by typing
"netsh interface tcp set global autotuning=normal"
And also see here:
www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#3
steve
"Superfly" <Superfly@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:24B99CE3-4519-4D45-A7E5-334AB2D3CBBD@microsoft.com...
>I recently bought a Vista computer and had my Outlook Express mail
>converted
> to Windows Mail. I'm finding the performance to be VERY slow, where
> Outlook
> Express with XP had no delays with half the RAM (now have 2GB). When I
> create a new e-mail, the new message opens immediately but locks up for
> approx. 8 seconds. It takes another 5-6 seconds for my address list to
> pop-up after pushing the "To" button. I understand that Windows Mail uses
> a
> real database with separate entries for each e-mail (much different than
> the
> Outlook Express construct), but regardless of whether there's a trade-off
> of
> security versus speed, something just doesn't seem right with the Windows
> Mail system. Anyone else have the same symptoms or know what might be
> happening? I've made some attempt to reduce my address book entries (and
> will continue to do so), but that shouldn't affect the delays for creating
> a
> new e-mail. Are there Vista security settings that are affecting this???